Lavender Magazine 667

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CONTENTS ISSUE 667 DECEMBER 17-30, 2020

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18

26

Page 10: Photo courtesy of Randy Stern, Page 18: Photo courtesy of PiccadillyPrairie, Page 26: Photo courtesy of B.A.D. Wingz

2020 Year in Review 10 The Dream of Owning a New Car Dealership 14 At Out With the Old, in With the Food 18 The Revolving Door of Stores 20 Looking Ahead: Finance for the Future 22 Lessons to be Learned, Life to Live 24 East Central MN Pride 26 Taylor Seaberg Wins Lavender Scholarship 28 Top 10 Cultural Moments of 2020

OUR LAVENDER

8 From the Editor 9 A Word in Edgewise

OUR LIVES

30 Leather Life

OUR AFFAIRS 31 Books

OUR RESOURCES

32 Community Connection 33 The Network

OUR VOICES

34 Skirting the Issues 34 Jamez Sitings

26 ON THE COVER

Taylor Seaberg Wins Lavender Scholarship

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DECEMBER 17-30, 2020

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Turbo Tim’s is for Lovers. Volume 26, Issue 667 • December 17-30, 2020

If your boyfriend is hot, have him come in and we will fix his AC

Editorial Managing Editor Ryan Patchin Editorial Assistants Kassidy Tarala, Linda Raines 612-436-4660 Editor Emeritus Ethan Boatner Editorial Associate George Holdgrafer Contributors Brett Burger, Ellen Krug, Steve Lenius, Mike Marcotte, Jennifer Parello, Holly Peterson, Jamez L. Smith, Randy Stern, Zaylore Stout, Kassidy Tarala, Bradley Traynor, Carla Waldemar

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Administration Publisher Lavender Media, Inc. President & CEO Stephen Rocheford 612-436-4665 Chief Financial Officer Mary Lauer 612-436-4664 Distribution Manager/Administrative Assistant Kallie Chu 612-436-4660 Founders George Holdgrafer, Stephen Rocheford Inspiration Steven W. Anderson (1954-1994), Timothy J. Lee (1968-2002), Russell Berg (1957-2005), Kathryn Rocheford (1914-2006), Jonathan Halverson (1974-2010), Adam Houghtaling (1984-2012), Walker Pearce (19462013), Tim Campbell (1939-2015), John Townsend (19592019)

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Entire contents copyright 2020. All rights reserved. Publication of the name or photograph of any person, organization, or business in this magazine does not reflect upon one’s sexual orientation whatsoever. Lavender® Magazine reserves the right to refuse any advertising. This issue of Lavender® Magazine is available free of charge during the time period published on the cover. Pickup at one of our distribution sites is limited to one copy per person.

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FROM THE EDITOR | BY RYAN PATCHIN

What’s next? Seriously, what’s the next thing that’s impactful enough to make us collectively gasp? I don’t even want to know. I understand that New Year’s Day doesn’t work like a light switch, but I have never chased a year out the door like this one. Reset! 2020 was supposed to be incredible. We were supposed to be zipping around in flying cars and I was promised self-lacing shoes years ago. I would have settled for a meal-in-a-pill, but this?! This is not the 2020 I imagined. Science fiction has been leaning on this mythical year for eons, all while chasing the wrong narrative. Befriending aliens and colonizing alternate planets are common fodder for comic books and for generations of television programming. No one mentioned a toilet paper shortage, nor was there a mention of having enough toilet paper—toilet paper was not discussed on any bridge of any spacecraft. Cut to reality, and we’ve got people clog-

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UNCLE!

ging up Target, buying bathroom tissue as if they’ve got five butts—that is, if they can afford to. Hardship and tumult have taken center stage, drowning out the tech and glitz that I’d always attached to “the future.” Our concerted efforts saw five years’ worth of change crammed into a few months as we put on a mask and took two steps back from one another. Imagine explaining life today to yourself, just one year ago. Let’s not forget the good stuff: resilience— both human and industrial—has shined bright in 2020. People adapted to new work environments as industries re-tooled in favor of pandemic-management. Neighbors banded together to rebuild in the face of civil unrest. We’re looking toward a fresh start with a new President. And we got sweatpants back. If I could go back and warn myself, I’d tell myself to practice longer shopping trips. No more of these four-times-per-week grocery runs, where your hands are your shopping receptacle. And get used to eating in your car.

You’re gonna hate it. I’d tell myself to invest in the hand sanitizer industry and the mask-making supply chain. Oh, and you can stop worrying about your commute. In March, I wrote an article about businesses (mostly) voluntarily closing their doors in an effort to quell the spread of COVID. In that piece, I mention the newly imposed “two-week shutdown” being insurmountable for many of the people facing it, and how being closed for two weeks could prove fatal for some businesses. Nine months later, and that two-week period has yet to relent in many cases. One after another, we’ve seen businesses and restaurants fall victim to the times. The people who those places were comprised of were left to explore a new normal— a normal that likely hasn’t been super fantastic. We head into 2021 and we strive to be OK. We’re going into the new year armed with a vaccine; we’ve got a bottled promise of life the way it used to be. I won’t guess how far into the future we’ll have to go to get to the familiar past —I’m along for the ride. 


OUR LAVENDER

A WORD IN EDGEWISE | BY E.B. BOATNER

Living Alone...Almost

I don’t always have mice, but I live in a hundred-something-year-old brownstone, and at the first brush of snow, they store their towels and beach umbrellas, their picnic baskets, their sandals and suntan oil—in their fair-weather Kenneth Grahame habitats and head for their centrally heated brick and mortar winter digs. Like many northern drivers, who each winter lose any remembrance of how to navigate on snow and ice, their spinning wheels burning clear down to the pavement without achieving traction, we owners of these murine motels never remember–or prefer to deny–that once again we will be spending the long, dark season no longer alone, no longer the kings of our castles until May buds blossom. Climate is changing. I’m not arguing, it’s a fact. I didn’t see a single fly in my kitchen this summer; nary a mosquito drew blood outdoors, or whined through my restful nights. Of course, murder hornets, brown marmorated stink bugs, zebra mussels, and green crabs are

marking new northern territories, while Silver (jumping) carp are in the Mississippi, but they’re not in Minnesota. Yet. How will we fare when they do arrive when we–or at least I, and this is my story–can’t cope with winter waves of Mus musculus Linnaeus? And they are winning: truly wild mouse populations, research reveals, are now less populous than the semi-domesticated ones foraging in your cupboards. Maybe they watch nature programs and observe other critters using homo saps to gain creature comforts, or maybe it’s just my imagination, but this year they’re bolder, more numerous, hungrier than in previous years. They don’t sit up and demand, I still just glimpse the usual fleeing brown streak, but they no longer have qualms about my presence. Lights on and moving about, they are mere feet away, still chewing. My first inkling that it was “that time again” was a recent gnawing sound one evening as I sat reading: A hole in a package of Saltines I’d left on the dining room table.

Easily remedied; I discarded that pack, put the rest in a cloth shopping bag and hung it up from the end of a bookcase, like we used to hang up bacon from bears in Canada. They climbed the books, chewed through the bag… Time passed. More gnawings. Louder, more frequent. I had ramen soups I thought were secure in Styrofoam cups, shrink-wrapped in cardboard covers. The sound of tiny teeth on Styrofoam in the dark of night resonates like mastiffs on a moose shin. Later gnashing and scrabbling in a bedside table drawer proved that foil-wrapped breakfast biscuits were easily detectable to quivering, sensitive noses. Kleenex tissues turned to lace indicated I was providing nest material as well as a varied diet. I have obtained several 17-gallon wheeled, plastic, airtight containers in which I’ve stashed every edible not in cans, and the house has returned to summer-silence. The little fellows have not yet learned to use can openers, but they have time on their side. 

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The Dream of Owning A New Car Dealership By Randy Stern It is a dream for many of us to own a business. We can certainly use a lot more LGBTQowned and operated businesses in every sector of the economy. It was a just matter of time until our community would see an automotive retailer become wholly owned by one of our own. That news came on September 30, when Bill Bertrand bought out Chippewa Valley Mazda in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin from Morrie’s Auto Group. He is one of the first LGBTQ automotive retailers with 100% ownership of a new vehicle dealership. Bertrand was with Morrie’s for almost 20 years before buying out the Chippewa Falls

store. “I think I did every piece of the job at the dealership up [until] that point,” said Bertrand, “I started out with them as a [finance & insurance] manager, ultimately became a general manager, a used car manager before that, and a minority partner for a number of years—and had the opportunity [for ownership] as we’ve evolved and changed owners and changed people along the way.” “When the timing was right,” Bertrand explained, “I made that decision to approach my partners [at Morrie’s], approached the investors in the store, and really ask them or position myself to be in a spot where I felt comfort-

able asking for full control or full ownership of the store.” There was one key reason for Bertrand to buy the store in Chippewa Falls. “I had partnered with Morrie Wagner [founder of Morrie’s Auto Group] for a number of years and really, the motivation came down to what the original Morrie and the original founder of this company always drove the business by,” Bertrand explained, “and that was the people. I had worked with most of these people side by side for a number of years.” Bertrand continued, “I think it came to be a point where I had to make a decision in my career, knowing that I want to realize ownership of a store or move on and do something different at a different level. It was, ‘Do I position myself where I ask to buy this store for the people? Or do I move on and do something different?’” It also came down to another important factor for Betrand. He explained, “I love the community that I live in. I love the people that Continued on page 12

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are here at the store and I’ve worked with sideby-side for so long. I think we’ve done great things. This is something that I’ve been used to coming to every day so there was just no question that it was something I wanted to do, it was just how I got from A to Z.” Getting “from A to Z” was indeed a task for Betrand. Lavender Magazine interviewed him back in 2008 or 2009 when he was a general manager of another Morrie’s store in the Twin Cities. We asked him about how he felt being a leader in an industry that did not welcome LGBTQ employees at that time. “It’s a proud moment to think back then because I was really nervous back then doing that interview,’ explained Bertrand. “I thought, ‘Wow. What does this look like for the company that I work for and what are they going to think of it?’ And [Morrie’s] embraced it, which is great and fantastic and all the things I love about being part of that company. But I look back now and I think, wow, it’s interesting that I was nervous and I had that perception at that point in time because it was new and it was different, and I think it’s even more unique coming from because we all have that stigma.”

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Any business transaction during a pandemic is a risky move. Especially in an industry that had seen a waves of change. Bertrand pointed out that “[the] industry and our business model is changing a lot. We’re a Mazda store sitting in western Wisconsin, and one would think, ‘How much business can that person do?’ What I’m realizing is your rooftop is as big as an internet address and as good as the cars that you carry and the marketing that you do, and the customer experience that you deliver from having happy employees and solid employees and a good background of diversity.â€? But, Bertrand sees a bright future for Chippewa Valley Mazda, and himself in the automotive retail business. “A couple things that I’m most excited about having ownership of the store,â€? said Bertrand, “one is that we’re all like little babies no matter where we’re at in life. We all probably want to grow to a degree. In the future, I’d love to expand. I’d love to get more stores and I’d like to stamp that out. For today, what I’m going to spend my time on focusing on is [the] culture [of the store].â€? As for the store’s performance, Bertrand pointed out that Chippewa Valley Mazda store has “traditionally sold a couple hundred used cars a month which is an anomaly,â€? According to Bertrand. “We’re ten to one new to used car ratios, and that’s an anomaly in our industry. What I’d like to see is that we continue to drive as a regional hub. We continue to deliver great exceptional guest experiences. I bought the store for the people. I bought it as much for myself as I bought it for the people who work here. I want to continue to enhance and enrich their lives.â€? Gaining ownership of any business is a huge task in itself. With the years of experience behind him, Bertrand has a solid base that he cultivated under the Morrie’s banner. This is why is move to buy out the store with a 100% ownership stake is a huge step in Bertrand’s career, as well as an advance in our community’s presence in a part of the industry that did not welcome us over a decade ago. If you get a chance, pop out to Chippewa Falls and visit Bertrand at his Mazda store. Congratulate him. Maybe consider taking one of his inventory of new and used vehicles home. ď ş


Out With The Old, In With The

Food By Kassidy Tarala

As the Twin Cities mourns the beloved restaurants and bars that were shuttered due to COVID-19, we have a whole bunch of new establishments to welcome to the food scene. I moved from my hometown outside of Milwaukee to the Twin Cities in 2015, and I very quickly discovered that I found my forever home. But when I accepted a new full-time job in Madison, Wisconsin, back in January, I had to temporarily leave my beloved cities. Because of COVID-19, I’ve been working remotely at said full-time job since March, and I was able to move back to the Twin Cities in September. While returning gave me an immediate sense of calm—I was finally home!—it also left me with a bad feeling in the pit of my stomach.

I was only gone for about nine months, but so much changed within that time. Following protests in response to the police murder of George Floyd, buildings were burned down, and there are messages of mourning, grief, and hope sprayed across the ones that remain. Soon after I moved back, I visited George Floyd Square. Several months after Floyd’s killing, the grief is still tangible. Our cities are in an immense amount of pain, and you can feel how deeply that pain is felt by driving or walking around the neighborhoods. While we’ve had to confront our long history of racism in the Twin Cities, we have also been facing the many struggles of the COVID-19 pandemic. As I write this, Minnesota’s cases and deaths are on the rise, and many folks are having to make the difficult decision to forego holiday plans this year. Many of our treasured restaurants and businesses have left us, too. The year 2020 has certainly taken its toll on the Twin Cities, exposing our weaknesses and forcing us to rebuild. But the good news is, despite all that we have lost, our communities are coming together like never before to create a future that is even better than our past. Here are some establishments that we have lost in 2020, as well as some new ones that we have to look forward to in 2021. Whether we are able to enjoy these new spots in person next year, or need to continue ordering delivery or curbside pickup, let’s look into the year ahead with hope—and empty stomachs.

FAREWELL… BAR LUCHADOR

We lost this iconic Mexican restaurant, located in Stadium Village, early during the pandemic. For me, personally, this was a tragic loss. Continued on page 16

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Bar Luchador was where I spent much of my time as a student at the University of Minnesota. It’s where I would go for happy hour specials with friends and classmates. It’s where I enjoyed some of my first dates with my partner. It’s where I ordered my first legal margarita. It’s where I would fill myself up on veggie tacos and chips and guacamole. For students and alumni of the University of Minnesota, the loss of Bar Luchador was a big one.

GINGER HOP

I’m convinced that the closing of Ginger Hop was a loss for everybody. I mean, it truly had everything. From its delicious spring rolls and banh mi to its long list of burgers and seafood options, Ginger Hop was a mix of flavors—each better than the last. Whether you enjoyed a meal on the sidewalk on a warm summer day, gathered in a cozy booth with friends and family on a snowy evening, or simply enjoyed its basement club, Honey, which has also closed, you surely have some good memories of Ginger Hop.

FUJI YA

Fuji Ya will forever hold a special place in my heart. This is where I went when I wanted to treat myself to absurd amounts of sushi. It’s where I spent a couple of anniversaries with my partner, where I made my family try sushi for the first time (let’s just say they’ll be sticking to cooked meats…), and where I celebrated New Year’s Eve in 2018. Fuji Ya was an Uptown staple for all sushi lovers, and it will be greatly missed.

THE 508 BAR + RESTAURANT

Tucked away in the Warehouse District, The 508 Bar + Restaurant was a go-to downtown spot for a quick bite to eat or cocktails with friends. It’s where I made a tradition with my best friend of celebrating International Women’s Day over shared appetizers and cocktails every March. It was cozy, always bustling, fun, and welcoming to everyone.

RAH’MN

I absolutely hate winter. I hate cold weather. I hate snow. I hate clunky boots. I hate hats. I hate the endless layers. But what I always loved on a dreadful Minnesota winter evening was warming up to a big bowl of ramen at Rah’mn

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in St. Paul. The build-your-own ramen restaurant was perfect for folks, like me, who like to switch up their ramen order or try something new. Our winter days will never be the same.

WELCOME… THE GET DOWN COFFEE CO.

This new Black-owned coffee shop opening in North Minneapolis is focused on one thing: community. A collaboration with Dogwood Coffee Co. and Houston White, The Get Down Coffee Co. is bringing specialty coffee to the north side of Minneapolis. Evident in its name, the coffee company is much more than just a caffeine fix: it’s all about the music, too.

BELLECOUR BAKERY

Located at the Cooks of Crocus Hill in the North Loop, Bellecour Bakery is the perfect spot when you’re craving something sweet. From its fresh croissants to authentic French patisserie delicacies, this new bakery will satisfy every sweet tooth. Not a dessert person? Well first of all, I’m sorry. But second of all, no worries. Bellecour Bakery also has a list of soups, salads, sandwiches, and coffee.

B.A.D. WINGZ

Admittedly, I don’t know much about wings. But I do know that fans of wings are dedicated

and can spot a bad wing from a good wing a mile away. Despite its name, B.A.D. Wingz has so far made a good impression on the Twin Cities’ food scene. Plus, with events like Wing Wednesday and Tuesday Night Trivia, the restaurant is more than good food; it’s also a good time.

GANDHI MAHAL’S CURRY IN A HURRY

You’ll know when you’ve arrived at Curry in a Hurry—it’s big, beautiful mural makes it hard to miss. If you’re ever in the mood for curry, and you either don’t have a lot of time or you simply can’t wait any longer, Curry in a Hurry is the perfect spot. I recommend the samosas and aloo matar gobi (with a side of garlic naan, of course).

UNION HMONG KITCHEN

The Hmong community has brought an abundant culture to the Twin Cities, and its food is no exception. Union Hmong Kitchen is a delicious spot with unique flavors that you truly won’t find anywhere else. The communalstyle Filipino cooking might not be ideal in the era of COVID-19, but that’s just more reason to enjoy a family-sized meal by yourself (or, okay, enjoy leftovers the next day). Grab takeout and enjoy your feast in the comfort of your own home. 


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The Revolving Door of

Stores By Kassidy Tarala

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, some stores have been shuttered. But with the loss of many Twin Cities gems comes the opportunity for new shops to pop up. The pandemic has taken a lot from us. Whether we lost loved ones, friends, our businesses, our jobs, or just our general sense of community due to isolation, COVID-19 has been anything but kind. Among the things we’ve had to say goodbye to this year are a number of local shops that couldn’t make it through the pandemic-induced lockdowns. Unfortunately, the majority of businesses that have closed are small, local, mom-and-pop type stores. While large, billion-dollar corporations received massive government bailouts, many small businesses were left to fend for themselves. Unsurprisingly, many were unable to survive. Here is a list of Twin Cities retailers we have lost to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as a list of new shops we have to look forward to in 2021.

FAREWELL… FIFTH ELEMENT RECORD STORE – 2411 HENNEPIN AVE., MINNEAPOLIS

The Uptown favorite, known for its CDs, records, apparel, and more, permanently closed in March. The independent music store was a Twin Cities treasure, especially for those looking for unique sounds that might not be available in big box music stores.

DEAD MEDIA RECORDS – 828 E. 35TH ST., MINNEAPOLIS

DUKE ALBERT – 1701 NE MADISON ST., MINNEAPOLIS

The Northeast location of Duke Albert closed its brick-and-mortar store during the pandemic, likely due to a lack of in-person shoppers. Though this is certainly a loss for folks who enjoy window shopping (during non-coronavirus times, of course), the store remains open online.

WELCOME… RUSSELL + HAZEL – 212 3RD AVE. N., MINNEAPOLIS

Partnering with MartinPatrick3, Russell + Hazel is opening its stationery and lifestyle shop to offer all sorts of desk and office organization supplies, stationery, binders, filers, notebooks, calendars and planners, and more. After the business had to close its North Loop flagship location, the reopening in collaboration with fellow Twin Cities staple MartinPatrick3 is a welcome sight.

PICCADILLY PRAIRIE – MALL OF AMERICA

The distinctive Twin Cities record store, Dead Media Records, was known for its vast offering of secondhand records, books, CDs, tapes, and more. For music lovers and thrift store junkies, the loss of Dead Media Records will be felt for years to come.

With a new location on the second floor of the Mall of America, Piccadilly Prairie is the perfect spot for art lovers and vintage fiends alike. Shop local artists’ goods from t-shirts and baseball caps to posters and masks. All are stylish, one-of-a-kind, and Minnesota-centric.

FLOTSAM + FORK – 3730 CHICAGO AVE., STE. A, MINNEAPOLIS

FOXWELL – 4400 FRANCE AVE. S., EDINA

The kitchen supply store Flotsam + Fork closed its storefront on Chicago Avenue, not far from where Minneapolis police murdered George Floyd in May. After the uprisings that followed Floyd’s killing, the store’s owners ultimately decided that it was time to close up shop.

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For those outside of the cities, you’ll definitely want to have this new Edina store on your list. HGTV’s “Stay or Sell” hosts, Brad and Heather Fox, are showcasing their home decor and interior design in the new shop Foxwell. Come for goods from local crafters or just to browse the beautiful products. 


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LOOKING AHEAD:

Finance for the Future By Ryan Patchin 2020 has society collectively looking over its shoulder; we’re all waiting for the next shoe to drop. Setbacks and shutdowns have people all over the world weary of spending and saving. Where do you allocate your investments in volatile times? Is it responsible to be invested right now? How deeply should I be invested; where should I be invested? For an educated take on my investment inquiries, I turned to Roya A. Moltaji, a financial planner and owner of ROYA llc (and friend of Lavender) for prudent pecuniary advice: This year was full of cur veballs, what has that done for financial planning? Are people changing investment strategies to match the dynamic nature of life in 2020? Luckily, the act of financial planning is designed to handle curveballs. In the process of planning, we create a roadmap for goal achievement. Of course, we all like to believe that life will go exactly as planned, but in reality, life is fluid and we’ll all experience changes. The environment around us is constantly changing and we need to be able to adapt. Our own desires and goals also change and what we think we want for ourselves in our twenties may change in our thirties, forties, fifties, and beyond. Part of the financial planning process is to create various scenarios to help people quantify the financial impact of decisions or circumstances they may be facing. Also, we develop a variety of investment scenarios to help determine the most appropriate path for our clients based on their stated goals and tolerance for risk. During the market downturn in March, there were three distinct reactions when I reached out to my clients to discuss their accounts. Many people close to retirement were not phased at all. They often responded by affirming they’ve been through many ups and downs in the market and they know we have a strategy in place to get them to—and through retirement. Young investors who hadn’t been invested in the 2008-2009 market downturn were often frightened and felt they needed to flee to safety. Young investors who had the experience of being invested during 2008-2009 by and large were considering adding as much money to their investment accounts as they could. What do you see happening in financial planning in 2021? I believe the desire for professional advice is increasing, and 2021 will be no exception. There is a lot of information and a lot of hardship out there. There’s a widely held belief that financial literacy is fairly low in this country, which also means many people don’t feel confident in their decision-making capabilities when it comes to money. During challenging times, people desire security, calm, and confidence. What should I (or anyone) definitely avoid right now? What moves are reckless in times like these? Avoid acting out of emotion with your money. It’s reckless to “jump on a bandwagon” or to act out of short-term greed or fear. In fact, I’d recommend against acting out of greed or fear at any time, and I encourage making a plan so you know when you’re off track. Knowing where you

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are according to where you thought you’d be can help you determine how to course correct in a thoughtful and strategic way. Let’s say someone gets a bonus from their job, or they get a gift of $1,000. What’s the smartest way to start investing or saving with a relatively modest initial investment? The first thing to consider is that everyone is different and has a different tolerance for risk and time horizon. Assuming this individual has a higher tolerance for risk, there are several online brokerage firms where you can open up an account, do some stock, mutual fund, or ETF research, and start investing. There are also some investment apps where you can do the same thing. Be sure to understand the cost structure of the platform you’re using and how to access information as well as your money. When I invested for the very first time at age 18, I decided to choose a company that I knew and it was a retail store that I shopped at consistently. Of course I didn’t know as much then about investing as I do now, but I looked at the performance chart and tried to do a bit of research to justify my “hunch” to invest in the company and I made the stock buy with the full understanding that I could lose my investment. From there, I continued to put small amounts of money into my online trading account in different companies I knew and liked, and that’s how my understanding of investment began before studying finance in college—and eventually beginning my financial planning career. What is Relational Financial Planning? When my wife [deemed] me a relational financial planner, I looked up the term and found it wasn’t defined on the internet. I thought the internet knew everything! I could talk about this subject for a while, but in brief, Relational Financial Planning means that relationship and experience are prioritized as much as transactions and outcomes. To make the most mathematically sound decision with one’s money isn’t necessarily at the center of the goal. But to build a better relationship with money, with family, with intimate and/or business partners, matters as much as the financial outcome of an action. In fact, the emotional impact means as much as the financial impact. How can people find you if they’d like to get a jump on financial planning? [Hopefully] I’m easily found! 

www.royamoltaji.com

rmoltaji@financialguide.com 952-769-2126 ROYA llc 100 S. 5th St., #2300 Minneapolis, MN 55402 **Roya Moltaji is a registered representative of and offers securities and investment advisory services through MML Investors Services, LLC. Member SIPC. www.SIPC.org ROYA llc is not a subsidiary or affiliate of MML Investors Services, LLC, or its affiliated companies. 100 S 5th St Suite 2300, Minneapolis, MN 55402 (612) 333-1413 CA Insurance License # 0L09841


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21


Lessons To Be Learned, Life To Be

Lived By Kassidy Tarala

In recognition of World AIDS Day on December 1, Daniel R. Sullivan, MA, LPC, BCAS, discusses the many roles he’s performed in relation to his own HIV diagnosis, and his experiences working with others living with HIV/AIDS. The COVID-19 pandemic has pretty much been all-consuming of our lives since March. But before the coronavirus, there was another epidemic that has claimed millions of lives— HIV/AIDS. Today, folks with HIV/AIDS can live long, healthy, and happy lives with the immunodeficiency syndrome, but that, of course, wasn’t always the case. “I can barely remember when HIV/AIDS was not a part of my life. It certainly has been a part of my life for more years than not. It was 1981, and I had just graduated from high school. There were occasionally very brief and often hidden articles about this ‘gay cancer’ that started to show up in a few gay and bisexual men in NYC and San Francisco. The articles were often placed in the back pages of newspapers. It was all very hush hush. One year later,

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there were louder rumblings about what had gone from being the ‘gay cancer’ to GRID-Gay Related Immune Deficiency,” says Daniel R. Sullivan, an HIV-positive therapist. It was not until the end of 1982 that that terminology was changed to AIDS: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, and by 1983, panic over the epidemic was growing internationally, Sullivan says. “There were talks of quarantining anyone testing positive for HIV, false information was rampant. Rumors led to irrational assumptions and behaviors. There was wide spread belief that a person could contract HIV by swimming in the same pool, drinking from the same glass, eating off the same plate, and sitting on the same toilet as someone who had tested positive for HIV,” he says. Sullivan was most frightened by the fact that when the AIDS pandemic was first recognized in 1981, the Ronald Reagan administration treated it like a joke. “Reagan himself did not acknowledge the existence of HIV/AIDS until late in 1987. By then, 23,000 people in the United States had died,” he says. “Even then, Reagan alluded to the fact that the disease could disappear simply by ‘moral standards’ being upheld.” In other words, if sex were kept in the con-

fines of a monogamous, heterosexual relationship, HIV/AIDS would “disappear” according to Reagan. “How familiar does all this sound? Foolishly, I remember thinking, ‘well I’m sure glad we have learned from our mistakes. This would never happen again,'” Sullivan recalls. “Obviously, 2020 has proven me wrong.” Sullivan says he often reminds himself that if he could survive one pandemic, he can survive another, a sentiment that he says many of his male clients share. Over the years, Sullivan has worked as an advocate, activist, friend, support network, volunteer, peer counselor, study participant, surrogate “son” for mothers who lost a child, a reassuring presence for folks who died of AIDS so that they wouldn’t be alone, pall bearer, minister, therapist, public speaker, author, educational counselor, and a gay man living with (not dying of ) HIV. Now, Sullivan works as a therapist, counseling people who are newly diagnosed with HIV, “providing the resources they need, teaching them that the best advocate they have medically is themselves, but most of all working with them to understand that life doesn’t end with a diagnosis of HIV,” he says. “As a matter of fact,


TOGETHER it could be the beginning of something amazing if they are open to it.” Sullivan says he wants people to know that HIV effects everyone differently, and that a diagnosis of HIV does not have to be a death sentence. “A person who has seroconverted, becoming HIV positive can live a happy, healthy, long life. With the ever-changing advancements in HIV medications, you can remain undetectable, and thus cannot transmit HIV to someone who is negative,” he says. “Despite all of the advancements, each person needs to stay up to date on the constantly changing information; be aware of the medications out there like PrEP, which when taken daily, has a 99 percent effective rate for stopping the transmission of HIV.” If you are negative, be informed and know what options are available for you to stay negative, Sullivan advises. “If you are positive, keep informed, know and utilize the options available to you. As an example, my first round of HIV medications I was taking six pills a day. Now, I take one pill per day. There is absolutely no need to live in fear. Live your life to the fullest, make a difference in the lives of those who enter your life.” 

against the

We all have our own unique styles. But this year there’s one thing we can come together as one on – controlling the flu. With one little flu shot and one little bandage, you can band together against the flu for us all.

All bandage art created by Minnesota artists. Learn more at health.mn.gov/bandagainstflu. u

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23


East Central Minnesota

Pride By Holly Peterson

Considering the chaos of 2020, it is almost hard to remember the feeling of collective disappointment this spring when we realized that Pride celebrations would have to be cancelled in deference to the pandemic. Then, as Pride month began and uprisings swept across the nation, we were reminded that Pride, too, began as a riot. We recalled the hard work of the LGBTQ activists before us as we stood alongside today’s racial justice activists. We remembered that the work is not done yet and we ended the summer advocating for Black trans lives. It is hard to know what 2021 will hold, but I know I am not alone in hoping that we will be able to safely gather and celebrate Pride in person again. As much as activism is the lifeblood of Pride, celebrating together is just as vital after a year like 2020. In Minnesota, we're lucky enough to have a number of Pride celebrations. If ever there was a year to double up on Pride, 2021 is going to be it. Phil Schroeder, who has been on the East Central Minnesota Pride (EC MN Pride) Board for the last ten years, was kind enough to walk me through the history, impact, and future of one of the few rural Pride celebrations in the country. EC MN Pride has been running since 2005, when the East Central Men’s Circle, a discussion group created by and for gay, bisexual, and questioning men of the region, decided to host a fifth anniversary party for their group. The East Central Men’s Circle was originally nervous about hosting the event. They were “unsure how a gay pride would go over in Greater Minnesota,” Schroeder explains. Consequently, that first year was relatively private. The men pooled together money to host a picnic, which was technically open to the public, but was not widely advertised. “We were skeptical about whether anyone from the LGBTQ community would show up in a public place,” said Don Quaintance, a founding member of the Pride Committee. “But a core group of fifty showed up for our first event, and it’s grown ever since.” Annual attendance for the celebration now hovers around 400 people each year. The event is “primarily focused on reaching people in the five counties of Isanti, Kanabec, Mille Lacs, Pine, and Chisago,” says Schroeder, although there are frequently attendees from the Twin Cities, Duluth, and parts of Wisconsin as well. Unfortunately, that original concern about celebrating Pride in Greater Minnesota was not completely unfounded. “EC MN Pride has endured despite a small segment of the local community’s opposition, protest, and other means to create barriers—both in promoting the event and accessing the use of potential locations,” Phil explains. This opposition illustrates the importance of Pride celebrations in rural areas. “Many LGBTQ and people from other diverse backgrounds living rurally or in small towns still…find it necessary to go to neighbor-

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Early ECMN Prides were held in Voyageurs Park in Pine City.

Great food and picnic have been a hallmark of ECMN Pride since its inception 15 years ago.

ing large cities to find connection,” says Schroeder. EC MN Pride offers another option: a rural, LGBTQ event. “Without the event, organizers believe there may not exist an ‘LGBT community’ in this part of the State,” Schroeder explains. Celebrating Pride in a small-town setting is empowering for a sometimes overlooked portion of the LGBTQ community. EC MN Pride has a legacy of special celebrations, from their 2013 celebration of Minnesota’s legalization of same-sex marriage to their 2015 celebration of the trans community. Most recently, in 2019, EC MN Pride celebrated a slew of anniversaries: the 20th Anniversary of the Mens’ Circle, the 15th Anniversary of EC MN Pride, and the 50th Anniversary of Stonewall. “In celebration of these milestones, we opened Pride 2019 with a ceremonial ribbon cutting at noon,” says Schroeder, “It was so satisfying to see how far our Pride event had come.”


The high of 2019 made the cancellation of 2020 even more heartbreaking. “We considered moving to a later date, or perhaps an online event of some sort, but eventually we decided to cancel while still reminding people that ‘Pride is every day,’” Shroeder says. The board also hung a large banner in Pine City and provided stickers and flags for those who still wanted to acknowledge Pride. The board is already working hard on 2021 in the hopes that it will be safe to gather by next June. “Thanks to the generosity, flexibility, and support of our local and regional funders and a host of others, we are able to carry over our dates, venue, entertainment and programming,” Shroeder says, “The biggest change will be the move from what had always been a first Sunday in June event to now the first Saturday.” Even the musical lineup from 2020 is carrying over to 2021, which means that we can already look forward to performances from Mark Joseph and the American Soul, Rebel Queens, Jacob Mahon and the Salty Dogs, and Martina Marracino. After listing everything that is in the works, Schroeder stops himself, “Ultimately, the COVID virus will determine if a June 2021 event will be possible,” he says. The board is hopeful, but safety remains a key factor in their plans. EC MN Pride continues to grow. One of the few rural options for LGBTQ life and entertainment, this Pride celebration strives to be an inclusive, safe space for everyone. “While focusing on the inclusion of LGBTQ and other diverse groups…we hope will make the event open and welcoming to an even larger community,” Schroeder says, “The basic premise of our project hasn’t changed much over the years, but the group’s capacity to put on a large, high-quality event grows each year,” Schroeder says. Let’s hope that in 2021 we will be able to celebrate the LGBTQ community together once more. Information and updates on the organization’s website: www.EastCentralMinnesotaPride.org June 5, 2021 from 12PM – 5PM at Robinson Park, Pine City, MN 

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11/13/20 10:53 AM


Taylor Seaberg Wins Lavender

Scholarship By Ryan Patchin

Lavender is delighted to announce the first recipient of the Lavender Scholarship. Taylor Ngiri Seaberg is a gender non-binary, third generation Kenyan-American multi-instrumentalist, photographer, videographer, community organizer, and playwright. Originally, Taylor had planned to attend Universität der Künste Berlin, but COVID complications put those plans on hold. What initially seemed like a setback positioned Taylor to the forefront of a historical summer on Minnnepolis’ South Side. “I’ve been awarded grants for photographing the uprising in Minneapolis this year, I was a resident in South Minneapolis who lived on 35th and Chicago a week before George Floyd was murdered by Officer Derek Chauvin,” Seaberg tells Lavender. “After rallying for several weeks, I was feeling introverted and a need to retain my spiritual energy from the chaos fluctuating in the world… I leaned into much of the photography I resonated with as a child and was able to borrow rental cameras from white video technicians that aimed to increase accessibility for lower income artists of color by lending me some equipment, including a Canon EOS 5D Mark II—to capture the world around me journalistically.” Seaberg’s coverage of the rallies and demonstrations that followed the killing of George Floyd has garnered a lot of positive attention. “This year I’ve been awarded [two] grants. A Red Bull Arts micro grant and a micro grant

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from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts.” “These are both artist grants for individuals who make experimental work.” Along with their photography, Taylor is the founding member of Black Velvet Punks, an all-black punk rock and hip hop group that includes bassist, Roderick Glasper, and drummer/vocalist, Traiveon Dunlap. Recognition from Lavender adds another accolade. “This award means a lot to me because with it I can continue to support the Twin Cities music collective, and an album project I am running called, The Art of the Revolution. This album includes [ten] Black artists [from] all around the Twin Cities.” “I worked in tandem with videographers like Nathaniel Nelson from Treedome in Winona. I want to use these funds to pay the engineer(s) that have been working on the project to help create exposure for the work of these artists.” Check out Taylor’s new music on Bandcamp and follow Black Velvet Punks on Facebook. 


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27


Top 1O

Cultural Moments of 2020

By Brett Burger

Listen, we all know that 2020 was awful. It was garbage, a dumpster fire; a trash heap…. whatever way you want to describe it, it sucked. It was not the year we had all hooped it would be. Regardless, there was certainly some history that was made and a lot of “firsts” that will help solidify 2020 as a year for the books. VICE PRESIDENT KAMALA HARRIS

Election 2020 had a lot of memorable moments including Maya Rudolph finding her way back to SNL or the infamous fly that landed on Mike Pence’s head during the debate. However, by far the most memorable – and truly historic – moment was after the race had been called on November 7th. For the first time in our nation’s 244 years of existence, a woman had been elected to serve as Vice President. Kamala Harris will not only be the first woman to hold this position but also be the first woman of color – being both Black and Asian – to be Vice President. No matter what political party you associate yourself with, you cannot deny that this is a historical and important moment in our country’s history.

YEAR OF WOMEN IN MUSIC

Album after album, song after song, 2020 was full of iconic albums. There is plenty of new music across genres, but it really was the year of women in music. Lady Gaga released her highly anticipated album Chromatica, where her transition from the song "Chromatica II" into "911" sent shockwaves through social media. Kylie Minogue reintroduced herself to a generation of queer listeners by releasing her 15th studio album, Disco. Dua Lipa came out with her sophomore album Future Nostalgia which dare I say is better than her first which is a hard thing to pull off. Miley Cyrus rebranded herself and found her niche of music by transitioning into a rock-and-pop type singer with her new album Plastic Hearts. I was also introduced to so many new singers including, Megan Thee Stallion, Doja Cat, Rina Siawayma, and Chloe x Halle—whose music has been on repeat for me almost all year.

RACIAL INJUSTICE AWAKENING

When a Black person is murdered at the hands of police officers, it feels like our country hasn’t progressed. There would be chaos and anger and then it eventually would fizzle and everyone would return to normal. That was until the murder of George Floyd, right here in our own community in Minneapolis, MN. Floyd, who was under arrest for allegedly passing a counterfeit bill, was pinned by a knee on his neck for

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a period of 8 mins and 46 seconds, by a white police officer. His death led to protests that spread across the United States and internationally, and has led to countless conversations locally, nationally, and internationally about white privilege, police brutality, and more discussions about race relations.

HARVEY WEINSTEIN CONVICTED AND THROWN IN JAIL

The movie producer seemed to have his hands involved in just about every award-winning movie for years. In 2017, it was unveiled that he had sexual abuse allegations dating back all the way to the 70’s. The allegations of nearly 80 women coming forward sparked the #MeToo social media campaign. It was finally time for the rich and powerful to be held responsible for their actions. Finally, it seemed that a sense of justice would be served as Weinstein had been arrested and charged with rape in New York in May of 2018. After two years of battling it out, he was convicted and found guilty on two of the five felonies—resulting in a sentencing of 23 years in prison.

THE DEATH OF TWO LEGENDS IN AMERICAN POLITICS

This year, we saw the death of a lot of celebrities and well-known public figures. However, there were two deaths that stung the most with many Americans. Representative John Lewis and Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg were two icons in the American Justice system. John Lewis, one of the “Big Six” leaders who helped organize the 1963 March on Washington and played a key role in the civil rights movement. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was a titan throughout her career. Nominated by President Bill Clinton, Ginsburg spent a large majority of her time fighting for gender equality and women’s rights. Being only the second woman to serve in the highest court, her followers dubbed her “The Notorious R.B.G” due to her notable majority opinions and fearlessness to fight for equality.

PRINCE HARRY AND MEGHAN MARKLE LEAVE THE ROYAL FAMILY

The Royal family has been in the news a lot over the last decade from the marriage of Prince William, to the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee and even the recounting of their lives in the series “The Crown” on Netflix. One could assume that the biggest surprise and story involving the Royal Family is when the couple announced they would no longer use their HRH titles and not receive public funds for royal duties. It was a shock-


ing announcement and unlike anything we’d seen from the Royal family. The Queen said in a statement that they were “pleased that together [they] had found a constructive and supportive way forward.”

TIGER KING: MURDER, MAYHEM, AND MADNESS

I think the earliest memory I have of the pandemic and being quarantined was watching Tiger King. As the year progressed, we all started saying things like “Remember the ‘Tiger King’ phase of the pandemic?” The American true crime documentary miniseries streamed on Netflix and was watched by nearly 35 million people in the first ten days. The series focused on the inner circles of a group of people who claim to own sanctuaries for big cats. The series shines a light on how these people exploit these animals. Every episode leads you to think things can’t get weirder but sure enough….it does. Every time.

THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC

Of course, this would make the list of top moments of 2020. It’s the reason why so many things are the way they are from wearing masks to figuring out that some people haven’t been washing their hands properly for years. That’s right, some didn’t even really wash their hands and we had no idea. The pandemic has already killed thousands of people across the world however there is hope—and a light at the end of the tunnel. As we close out the year, there are multiple vaccines that are getting ready to be accessible to the public.

AWARD SHOW FIRSTS:

My first language is English however my second is Award shows. I like to watch a ton but really my main favorites are the big four and the Golden Globes. This year we saw a lot of firsts and history in the award

show categories. Starting with the Golden Globes which were in January, we saw Awkwafina win in the lead actress for “The Farewell” – the first performer of Asian descent to win in that category. Then came the Grammys where Billie Eilish, who was 18 at the time, became the first woman – and second artist in Grammy history – to sweep all Big Four awards: album, record, song, and best new artist. The Oscar awards were a few weeks later in which the film Parasite took home the most awards winning Best Picture, Directing, Feature Film, and Original Screenplay. While movies have won these awards before, it is the first non-English language film in Oscar history to win Best Picture. A few months later, and well into the pandemic, we saw the Emmy awards completely need to redesign their set up by doing it virtually. The pandemic did not stop Schitt’s Creek from sweeping a total of seven Emmys breaking the record for most wins by a comedy in a single year. It also made history when it became the first show ever to win all four acting categories in the same year.

ANIMAL CROSSING BRINGS NEW FANS TO VIDEO GAMES:

The game “Animal Crossing: New Horizons” came out in March and quickly became the reason why the Nintendo Switch was the hardest console to find this year. It was a hit breaking console game records left and right from physical to digital copies. Partially its success was due to the COVID pandemic however it was praised for its gameplay and customization options. The game was a sanctuary for those suffering with mental illness who were stuck at home. It helped bring people together from all around the world, allowing us to travel to islands. As someone who is a daily player, I highly recommend it. It’s unbelievably fun and helps make the time pass wonderfully. 

LAVENDERMAGAZINE.COM

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OUR LIVES

LEATHER LIFE | BY STEVE LENIUS

The Year In Review – What I Learned During 2020 This column appears in the “2020 Year In Review” issue of Lavender. But how do you review a year in which so much did not happen? What kind of review can you give to a year that, along about March, turned completely detestable? I could review 2020 by talking about all the GLBT and leather/BDSM/fetish events, such as the Pride Festival, Pride Parade, and all the Minnesota Leather Pride events, that did not happen. But that would just be depressing. I don’t need to remind you of everything that didn’t happen this year. You probably are depressed enough about it already. So let’s approach this review of 2020 differently. When I meet adversity, I have learned to ask myself a question: “What am I supposed to learn from this?” If something bad happens but I learn something from it, that means it’s not totally bad after all. At least I will have benefited from the adversity by learning something from it. So what did I learn from 2020? What did I learn from a global pandemic, from widespread economic problems, from seeing massive instances of racial injustice (and the protests that these injustices inspired), from environmental degradation causing worsening fires, storms and floods, and from a nightmarish election season? (Not to mention missing all the fun things I have done for so many years but couldn’t do this year.) Consider America’s Great Depression in the 1930s. For the people who lived through that time and that experience, life changed. Even after things improved, their experiences of coping with the Great Depression colored their outlook for the rest of their lives. Boom times during the 1920s gave way to very dark times during the 1930s. And the darkness lingered for almost a decade until World War II came along. World War II was another dislocating ordeal to live through. In the USA it was a time of sacrifice, rationing, and food shortages. Men were sent to battlefronts and women went to work in the factories to make war materials. No one knew how long the war would last or how it would end. Again, those who lived through it—who didn’t die as a victim of the war—came out the other side of the experience forever changed. Both the Great Depression years and the World War II years wrought changes both on an individual, personal level and on a societal, communal level. Society was not the same after either of these experiences.

Now let us consider a more recent example of a tragic era with long-lasting and life- changing consequences: the AIDS crisis. Those whom AIDS did not kill still bear the scars of those years. And so do both the GLBT and gay leather communities. AIDS caused major losses and major changes in the makeup and culture of both of these communities, and these changes still influence how these communities operates today. Just as AIDS caused major changes to the GLBT and gay leather communities, the current pandemic will cause changes for the whole world, and for all societies and cultures in it. Furthermore, those of us in the USA might suffer more effects, and more drastic effects, because we have had to deal with so many more cases, and so many more deaths, than many other countries.

So what can we learn from all this? Events like the Great Depression, World War II, the AIDS crisis and today’s global pandemic are almost guaranteed to prompt both individual and societal reassessment, both of the status quo and of goals and desires. The sexual revolution in the 1970s was a great time for many while it lasted, but people reassessed what they were doing when it suddenly looked like it could kill them. Likewise, the current pandemic is causing society, and us as individuals, to reassess such things as festivals, parades, weddings, funerals, church services and schooling— things that many if not most of us formerly took for granted as just the way things were. Now, suddenly, just the simple act of going out to eat with a friend or group of friends needs to be risk-assessed. We in the leather/BDSM/fetish community Continued on page 33

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OUR AFFAIRS

BOOKS | BY E.B. BOATNER

The Rules of Contagion Adam Kucharski Basic Books, $30

A mathematician and an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Kucharski wrote his book before Covid-19. He analyzes infectious disease outbreaks, now including COVID-19, and applies that disease knowledge to other forms of contagion; virality spreads in a similar fashion in online manipulation, exploding financial bubbles, and disinformation campaigns. “Epidemiological thinking,” is the mindset needed by those scientists working with incomplete information, such as this heretofore unknown Covid-19 virus. Something must be done at the onset of a fastmoving, contagious virus, and a rough or incomplete hypothesis is better than nothing. Today, all the world’s countries are affected and are having to learn to share and change. His study of patterns and movements is timely today and will serve us well tomorrow.

Make sure your Business, Organization or Event is part of

LAVENDER’S 2021 PRIDE EDITION!

All the Devils Are Here Louise Penny Minotaur Books, $28.99

Tired of being everlastingly “at home”? Head to Paris where Armand and Reine-Marie Gamache are on vacation awaiting the birth of a new grandchild. Walking back from a celebratory dinner, Armand’s elderly godfather Stephen is targeted by a hit-and-run assassin. The plot unfolds as Stephen lies near death in hospital. Secrets from his past emerge, a stranger is murdered in his apartment, and Armand seeks to learn why his son, also living with family in the City of Light, remains estranged. The families, the villains, and the devils converge. Penny pulls out all the stops weaving together threads from the Musée Rodin, a bar à vins, the Bibliothèque nationale, Stephen’s sumptuous digs, among them. An enthralling, dark Hallmark greeting from Penny: and she’s written fifteen more.

American Art: Collecting and Connoisseurship General Editor Stephen M. Sessler Merrell, $70

Elizabeth Brown’s foreword describes how in 2006, Atlanta collector Sessler created the nucleus of which became the Atlanta Art Forum that has continued to grow and prosper through the past twelve years, offering five programs annually designed for the serious collector. This handsome, lavishly illustrated volume contains twenty-eight “chapterettes,” essays donated by speakers from these years. The collection is gathered into three sections, “The Historical Overview,” “Connoisseurship and the Collector,” and “Changes in the Art Market.” Together, they offer an insider’s view into a special world, and cover a broad spectrum of topics, including honing one’s taste and eye, market trends, development of American Art, conservatorship, framing, selling, and legal issues. Informative, richly detailed, it’s up to you to decide whether to gift or keep.

Fallout: The Hiroshima Cover-up and the Reporter Who Revealed It to the World Lesley M.M. Blume

Simon & Schuster, $27

Thirty-one-year-old war correspondent John Hersey heading home from Moscow in 1945 when the learned an atomic bomb had demolished Hiroshima. There was much flaunting of the destruction it achieved, followed by government coverup and denial of radiation deaths, Lt. Gen Leslie Groves asserting radiation poisoning was “a pleasant way to die.” Nowhere were human faces attached to casualty rates. The press was admitted only under heavily monitored military supervision. With The New Yorker editors’ assistance, Hersey made it in. He interviewed six survivors of that fatal August morning, their harrowing tales the beating heart of 30,000-word, full-issue piece published in August, 1946. Blume’s exhaustive research details in splendid prose how Hersey persevered, demonstrating to the world the full horrors nuclear warfare held for the future. 

Deadline: May 14, 2021 Published: June 3, 2021 To reserve ad space, call

612-436-4660 or email info@lavendermagazine.com Available in print, online, iPad, and smartphone editions, and distributed at more than 430 sites, including around all major Pride events. LAVENDERMAGAZINE.COM

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COMMUNITY CONNECTION

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LAVENDER

DECEMBER 17-30, 2020


are used to being aware of and assessing risk. That puts us in a healthier position than many other people who have never before had to think about these kinds of things. We are still in the middle of this pandemic, so it is difficult to make predictions about what life will look like after the pandemic has been brought under control. But life, and society, and our community, will be different. We will have been forced to assess our priorities and make decisions and hard choices. Some of us, and some of our organizations, might have been running on autopilot and inertia, just doing things the way we have always done them—precisely because “that’s the way we’ve always done them.” There’s nothing like a global pandemic to shock us out of our comfortable routine and force us to assess things and make some changes. Some who have been coasting on inertia might drift away. Some who might have wanted to be involved, but have been resisting involvement, might decide that life is short and it’s time to go where they have been afraid to go. And some, denied the chance to do what they have done for years and taken for granted, might wake up and realize that things cannot be taken for granted. When the pandemic subsides, they will again do what they were doing before the pandemic, but with renewed commitment, conviction, enjoyment and savor. On a personal note, during this time of “No, it’s not safe to do that,” I find myself remembering—and missing intensely— things I used to do, places I used to go, and people I used to see. That, for me, is a truly eye-opening learning experience. I am learning, and being forced to focus on, what is most important to me—and what is less so. What have I outgrown? What have I grown into? Once this pandemic is past, what will I do again with renewed enjoyment? And what will I let go? We, as the GLBT and the leather/ BDSM/fetish communities, will experience these same kinds of learning and make these same kinds of community decisions. What have we been doing just because we’ve always done it? Which of these things are still worth doing? What have we really missed as a community? What has left a huge hole in the life of our community? That’s what we should renew when we can. We, as individuals and as community members, would do well to come out of this pandemic with this kind of learning and reassessment. If we can do that, we will be rewarded with lives and communities with increased vigor, purpose and enjoyment— once we have gotten through this yet-another-effing-growth-experience. 

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OUR VOICES

SKIRTING THE ISSUES | BY ELLEN KRUG

JAMEZ SITINGS | BY JAMEZ L. SMITH

CONSEQUENCES

_THE GROSS YEARS_

As they say, elections have consequences. Somewhere around noon on Saturday, November 7th, one consequence of the 2020 presidential election was that 79-million-ish Americans started celebrating, many in the streets. That included a whole bunch of LGBTQ-identifying humans and their allies who finally were able to breathe a collective sigh of relief. There are no words to capture the utter joy I experienced just now in writing the two preceding sentences. It’s as if someone with a crowbar pried a million bricks off my chest. More personally, the election had several other consequences. For one, I had been debating whether to return to live in Iowa where I grew up, raised a family, and came out as Ellie Krug more than a decade ago. I’m truly an Iowan at heart and often think that when the time comes, I want my last few breaths in this world to occur on Iowa soil. I nixed returning to Iowa when the state went near completely Red in this election—the governorship (still in midterm) and Iowa Senate and House are majority Republican. Indeed, a few days after the election, Iowa Republican legislative leaders announced they gauged the results so overwhelming that they believed it was a “mandate” from voters. For queer people, “mandate” is code for more attempts to pass anti-LGBTQ laws, particularly legislation that will seek to further marginalize transgender persons. This could come in the form of bathroom bills (where I’d be forced to use public restrooms that conform to my birth gender), or restrictions on access to healthcare, or god knows what else. It just doesn’t make sense for me to go from the Twin Cities, where I’m relatively safe to live as “me,” back to a state where elected leaders relish making me and others in my community second class citizens. I’d also always fear that as a trans woman who doesn’t fully “pass” due to my voice, I might find myself in the wrong place, at the wrong time, with the wrong people. I just can’t justify taking that risk. In summary, Iowa won’t have this native daughter returning. At my age—soon to be sixtyfour— this was probably the last window for me to get back home to replant roots. Writing that makes me incredibly sad. My heart is truly Iowan. This election also helped me decide not to run for elected office, something I had been kicking around for nearly a year. I’m convinced that most of our elected leaders have two major faults: they’re afraid to actually lead for fear that it will cost them political clout and they’re unwilling to use bold imagination to tackle problems innovatively. Instead, most elected officials cower and default to same old, same old, strategies to problem solve. That largely explains why it seems that we hardly move the needle on intractable issues around skin color, income inequality, homelessness, and a host of other things that must be addressed but aren’t.

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OUR VOICES

DECEMBER 17-30, 2020

1990 – 1992 Seattle Racism From Queer Club Promoters to Driving While Black Thrown in Jail for crimes uncommitted Records permanently marred. 1992 – Broken Heart Shattered Nervous Breakdown Lonely With Despair Escape The Deep White North to keep The Dream Alive.

1992 San Francisco, The Return Home! Burglarized the very first day. I’d like to think that I’m not afraid to lead, and god knows, I’m always using my imagination, sometimes to my detriment. But I wanted to wait to see how things shook out with the 2020 results before deciding whether to run. Then, after some candid advice from a dear friend, along with a jolt of much-needed self-honesty, I decided that I just don’t have it in me to campaign, ask for money, and do all the other crap that comes with running for elected office. Nope, I think that I should just stick with what I do best: talking to and inspiring humans on how to be more compassionate toward each other, particularly to those considered “Other” in our often narrow-minded and fearful society. One more personal consequence of Election 2020: I will redouble my efforts to bridge the huge divide between Red and Blue America. This includes doing far more work in greater Minnesota (and the larger Midwest in general). I’ve been pushing to no avail an inclusivity plan to reach those who live outside the state’s urban areas; it looks like I simply need to push harder. (A Hail Mary: email me at elliejkrug@gmail.com if you’d like a copy of that inclusivity plan; I’ll take any help I can get.) The problem, of course, is that I’m just an army of one (see a prior column where I whined endlessly about that…). Still, that’s not an excuse not to try. Finally, the last few weeks, which have given me the ability to say, “Biden-Harris Administration,” have also allowed me to hope again. For sure, things are incredibly bumpy right now as the current White House occupant works to burn down the country on his way out the door. Yet, though, I again believe in the promise of America. It feels so damn good.  Ellen (Ellie) Krug, the author of Getting to Ellen: A Memoir about Love, Honesty and Gender Change, speaks and trains on diversity and inclusion topics; visit www.elliekrug.com where you can also sign-up for her monthly e-newsletter, The Ripple. She welcomes your comments at ellenkrugwriter@ gmail.com.

1993: Police escort from Mother’s Home Dared stand betwixt Children and Threat of Death. Haven’t spoken with my sister since. 94 – 95 The struggle to survive. Part-time temp jobs 99 cent two-wing dinners Working a Club Scene That worked to keep me down Threatened by lies Fearful of Truth 1996 – The Fix-Up A Sexual encounter Multiplied into a Romance Blossomed into Love Flowers plucked crushed underfoot A Grown Man Afraid of Pinnochio Never was a Real Boy. 1997. The Great Fire Of, preceded by Thirteen Deaths Another shattering of reconstructed heart Forced from Dream Job by one who wanted to be the Only Black Man. Kicked out of flat for not fucking David who never offered to share a bed. Grandfather dies saying, “Poor Annette. Poor Annette.” Move back in with Mom, Poor Annette, And the kids and their kids All those people All that drama And a meth lab next door Burning Down The House. 1998 – More of the same. Fewer fires. 1999 I don’t want to die. I’d rather dance my life away.


Season´s Greetings and a Happy New Year From All Of Us At


Prevent the spread, Minnesota. Continue to follow safe practices: 1

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Wear a mask mn.gov/covid19

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